Los Angeles Times

State of bliss: Mississipp­i has two of everything

- By Zach Helfand zachary.helfand@latimes.com

How long has it been since the state of Mississipp­i was relevant in the Southeaste­rn Conference?

Consider: The state’s last SEC championsh­ip was in 1963, when Ole Miss won it. Man had not yet been to the moon, Mississipp­i State still hadn’t integrated ( Ole Miss had been integrated for just a year), and the Big Ten was still relevant.

Half a century has passed, and there’s a long conference season still to be played, but for the first time in a long, long time, there’s reason to believe.

The SEC West has seven teams, and six of them would probably be a favorite in any other conference. Those six teams played one another Saturday, and the two from Mississipp­i were the biggest winners.

Mississipp­i State, ranked 12th, trounced No. 6 Texas A& M, 48- 31, and just may be the conference’s best team. Dak Prescott threw for 259 yards and two touchdowns and rushed for 77 yards and three scores. He is making a strong early case for the Heisman Trophy.

This was two weeks removed from Mississipp­i State’s 34- 29 manhandlin­g of Louisiana State that was a blowout before the Tigers added two late touchdowns.

Never before had Mississipp­i State beaten two Associated Press top- 10 teams in a season. The Bulldogs just did it in consecutiv­e games. They’ll play a third, Auburn, next week.

Ole Miss’ win may have been even more impressive. They slugged with Alabama for three quarters before a late touchdown pass and an intercepti­on in the end zone won it for the Rebels, 23- 17.

Oxford, Miss., has always been a pleasant place to watch a game. The Grove has some of the best tailgating in the SEC.

Amid all that grilling and drinking and partying, a pretty good football team has suddenly appeared. Ole Miss will host Mississipp­i State in the last game of the regular season, the annual Egg Bowl.

The Egg Bowl is typically a f itting name, since both teams stink. This time, it could determine the SEC West winner.

Top- 10 shake- up

Thanks largely to the state of Mississipp­i, the Nos. 2,3, 4, 6 and 8 teams in the AP top 25 all lost in the same week.

Arizona knocked off No. 2 Oregon on Thursday, and Texas Christian upset No. 4 Oklahoma, 37- 33, Saturday with an intercepti­on- return touchdown in the fourth quarter.

Underdogs, savor this week. Alabama, USC, UCLA, Oklahoma, Michigan, Nebraska, LSU, Texas, Texas A& M, Florida and Oregon all lost, which doesn’t happen often.

When in doubt, blame the refs

A new Big 12 rivalry is budding, and despite the upset Saturday, it’s not TCU- Oklahoma. No, this one is Iowa State vs. the refs.

After a 37- 20 loss to Oklahoma State, Iowa State Athletic Director Jamie Pollard took the unusual step of airing his grievances against Big 12 officiatin­g in the postgame news conference.

“It’s hard to watch ESPN, Fox, other announcers not debate, but feel sorry for Iowa State because maybe there’ll be another apology for the call,” Pollard said.

The Cyclones have been on the wrong side of several controvers­ial calls recently.

As time expired to end the first half Saturday, an Iowa State goal- line stop was overturned despite the lack of any clear camera view showing a touchdown.

Last week, after an Iowa State loss to Kansas State, the Big 12 apologized after a replay official didn’t review a close call. The official was also suspended.

And last year, Iowa State recovered a goal- line fumble against Texas but the play was ruled dead, and Texas later scored. The Cyclones lost that game by a point.

Pollard implied that the calls could be retributio­n for some past incident.

“Coach [ Paul] Rhoads and I, a year and a half ago, raised an issue, and we were the lone vote, and ever since . . . we’ve been on the short end of the stick,” Pollard said.

High- prof ile injuries

A rather gruesome moment marred the Ole Miss- Alabama game. After catching a pass, Alabama running back Kenyan Drake went down to the turf and immediatel­y grabbed his left leg. His screams were picked up by TV microphone­s, and his foot was angled back toward his ankle. Coach Nick Saban said the injury was believed to be a broken leg, and Drake’s season could be over.

It was the second major injury of the week. BYU quarterbac­k Taysom Hill broke his left leg Friday during a loss to Utah State.

Hill was an outside contender for the Heisman, and before the loss BYU had been a dark- horse candidate for the College Football Playoff.

Cardinal sins

What is it with Stanford and close games? The Cardinal lost a 13- 10 nailbiter to USC in the second week of the season. It lost late again on Saturday at Notre Dame.

Stanford took a 14- 10 lead with 3: 01 to play, but with the game on the line on fourth and 11, Notre Dame’s Everett Golson drifted out of the pocket and found Ben Koyack in the corner of the end zone for the winning 23- yard touchdown pass with 1: 01 left.

Big Ten, little impact

Oregon’s loss hurt the Big Ten’s already slim chances of sending a team to the playoff this year. In spite of this, they’ve decided to keep playing games. Michigan State, which lost to Oregon earlier this year, knocked off Nebraska on Saturday, meaning every Big Ten team has at least one loss.

 ?? Ji m Lytle Associated Press ?? RYAN BROWN ( 48), Josh Robinson ( 13) and Nick James celebrate Mississipp­i State’s 48- 31 win over No. 6 Texas A& M. Mississipp­i took down No. 3 Alabama.
Ji m Lytle Associated Press RYAN BROWN ( 48), Josh Robinson ( 13) and Nick James celebrate Mississipp­i State’s 48- 31 win over No. 6 Texas A& M. Mississipp­i took down No. 3 Alabama.

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